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(10/25/12 6:13am)
Living in a big city can be expensive, but it doesn’t have to be. Every week there’s somebody willing to feed, entertain, occupy, educate or annoy you for free. “Free in D.C.” rounds up the best free events in the coming week to help you stretch that paycheck just a little bit further.
(10/11/12 6:13am)
Per Kirkeby might be the most famous artist you’ve never heard of.
(09/13/12 6:13am)
Living in a big city can be expensive. But it doesn’t have to be. Every week there’s someone willing to feed, entertain, occupy, educate or annoy you, all for free. Fine Art For Free rounds up the best free art events in the coming week to help you stretch that paycheck just a little bit further.
(04/17/12 6:14am)
A few songs into their set at the Red Palace on April 13, Howler lead singer Jordan Gatesmith broke from his usual detached silence to introduce the next track.
(04/17/12 6:13am)
For the first time in a while, the focus of the D.C. Arts scene moved east of the river with the Lumen8 Anacostia art, music and light festival, the kickoff to a three month-long art showcase in the historic neighborhood on April 14.
(04/10/12 6:13am)
After seven years of pretension-free indie rock, Plants and Animals have grown comfortable in their classic-rock influenced sound and amassed a small but dedicated following.
(04/03/12 6:13am)
After finishing their regular set of finely-tuned folk music, First Aid Kit took the stage at the Black Cat for a second time and said they were going to play a song by “the coolest woman ever.” Immediately, one audience member shouted “Joni Mitchell,” and folk-fan heads throughout the audience nodded in approval.
(03/30/12 5:14pm)
With a sound like a cross between Fleet Foxes and the Indigo Girls, Swedish sisters Klara and Johanna Söderberg, aka First Aid Kit craft classic, no-frills American folk out of soft acoustic guitar and country-tinged harmonies. First Aid Kit doesn’t break any new musical ground, but they do play perfectly crafted folk with admirable skill.
(03/06/12 6:13am)
The stage at U Hall will be a little more crowded than usual and the dance floor a little more alive March 10 thanks to 12-piece “afrofunk orchestra” Chopteeth, who will be doing their best to move every booty in attendance.
(02/28/12 6:13am)
Jacqueline Levine’s exhibit “Temptation” is all about fear, but it’s probably the least frightening exhibit in the entire city. That’s because Levine’s cartoon world combats fear with happiness and confidence, and the whimsicality and beauty of her work ensures that, just by walking into the exhibit at the Flashpoint Gallery in Metro Center, you’re halfway there.
(02/20/12 6:13am)
The abandoned trolley tunnels under Dupont Circle are generating a lot of buzz, despite being empty for roughly 40 years, and have the potential to become the newest hallmark of Washington.
(02/08/12 2:49am)
Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, or the two remaining members who call themselves Bone Thugs, focus on a few things: life, death and marijuana.
(02/03/12 7:08pm)
The old-school rap circuit is, for the most part, a very sad place. With acts like Digital Underground and Cyprus Hill breathing a dying breath into has-been hits (“Humpty Dance” and “Insane in the Brain,” respectively), it’s sometimes easy to write off old-school acts entirely. But then there’s Bone Thugs-n-Harmony.
(01/31/12 6:13am)
Katzen’s new winter exhibits have a bit of an identity crisis.